释义 |
Examples:United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea—fetch the moon out of the sea (idiom); a hopeless illusion—palace of the Dragon King at the bottom of the Eastern Sea—The sea of bitterness has no bounds, turn your head see the shore (idiom). Only Buddhist enlightenment can allow one to shed off the abyss of worldly suffering.—Macclesfield Bank, series of reefs in the South China Sea southeast of Hainan Island—Capernaum (biblical town on the Sea of Galilee)—the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea (mythology)—Sea of serenity (Mare Serenitatis, on the moon)—Poseidon, God of the sea in Greek mythology—the China Seas (the seas of the Western Pacific Ocean, around China: Bohai Sea, Yellow Sea, East China Sea, South China Sea)—shrimp soldiers and crab generals (in mythology or popular fiction, the army of the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea)—mountain of Dao, sea of learning (idiom); learning is as high as the mountains, as wide as the seas—Rostov-on-Don, Russian river port and regional capital close Sea of Azov (north of the Black Sea)—lit. the gate of a noble house is like the sea—extinguish worries and the sea of grief—Matsu, name of a sea goddess still widely worshipped on the SE China coast and in SE Asia—Dalmatia, Croatian region on the eastern coast of Adriatic Sea—Sea of Tranquillity (on the moon)—lit. a clay ox enters the sea (idiom); fig. disappear with no hope of returning—Pomerania, a historical region on the south shore of the Baltic Sea—rarities from the mountain and the sea (idiom); fig. a sumptuous spread of food delicacies—Amu Darya, the biggest river of Central Asia, from Pamir Aral sea, forming the boundary between Afghanistan and Tajikistan then flowing through Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan—whistling or rushing sound (of the wind in trees, the sea etc)—sailing on the sea of learning [idiom.]— |